| Literature DB >> 35745506 |
Antonio Russo1, Mariantonietta Pisaturo1, Roberta Palladino1, Paolo Maggi2, Fabio Giuliano Numis3, Ivan Gentile4, Vincenzo Sangiovanni5, Vincenzo Esposito6, Rodolfo Punzi7, Giosuele Calabria8, Carolina Rescigno9, Angelo Salomone Megna10, Alfonso Masullo11, Elio Manzillo12, Grazia Russo13, Roberto Parrella14, Giuseppina Dell'Aquila15, Michele Gambardella16, Antonio Ponticiello17, Nicola Coppola1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Given the impact of COVID-19 on the world healthcare system, and the efforts of the healthcare community to find prognostic factors for hospitalization, disease progression, and mortality, the aim of the present study was to investigate the prognostic impact of transaminases and bilirubin levels at admission to hospital on disease progression and mortality in COVID-19 patients.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2 infection; bilirubin; mortality; severity of disease; transaminases
Year: 2022 PMID: 35745506 PMCID: PMC9227474 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11060652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Flow chart of patients included.
Demographic, clinical and laboratory data of patients included.
|
| 1003 (61%) |
|
| 62.35 (16.14) |
|
| 3 (2.43) |
|
| 779 (47.5%) |
|
| 467 (28.5%) |
|
| 347 (21.1%) |
|
| 147 (9%) |
|
| 160 (9.8%) |
|
| 63 (3.8%) |
|
| 112 (6.8%) |
|
| 90 (4.9%) |
|
| 15.64 (9.49) |
|
| 9218.8 (8177.18) |
|
| 1.14 (0.4) |
|
| 1.3 (1.8) |
|
| 186 (460) |
|
| 359 (227) |
|
| 239 (108) |
|
| 52.38 (101.74) |
|
| 386 (23%) |
|
| 46.05 (93.6) |
|
| 455 (27.7%) |
|
| 0.81 (1.76) |
|
| 208 (12.6%) |
* or death in patients who died during hospitalization; ** analysis performed on 1548 patients; *** analysis performed on 1445 patients; £ analysis performed on 1403 patients; $ Abnormal value defined as upper of 51 UI; $$ Abnormal value defined as upper of 43 UI; $$$ Abnormal value defined as upper of 1.00 mg/dL.
Demographic, clinical and laboratory differences at admission of patients grouped by disease severity.
| Multivariate Analysis | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients with Mild Clinical Outcome | Patients with Moderate Clinical Outcome | Patients with Severe Clinical Outcome | Patients Who Died during Hospitalization | OR (95% CI) | ||||
|
| 485 (61) | 204 (58,8) | 232 (65,5) | 80(53) | 0.047 a | 0.559 d | 0.91 (0.72–1.14) | 0.427 |
|
| 59.31 (15.961) | 61.34 (15.752) | 63.18 (13.896) | 79.03 (12.030) | <0.001 c | <0.0001 e | 1.02 (1.01–1.03) | <0.001 |
|
| 2 (1–4) | 2 (1–4) | 3 (1–4) | 5 (4–7) | <0.0001 b | < 0.0001 e | 1.088 (1.005–1.18) | 0.037 |
|
| 341 (43.2) | 173 (49.8) | 180 (50.8) | 86 (56.9) | 0.004 a | <0.0001 d | 1.07 (0.85–1.34) | 0.563 |
|
| 201 (25.5) | 87 (25) | 100 (28.2) | 79 (52.3) | <0.0001 a | <0.001 d | 0.84 (0.63–1.10) | 0.203 |
|
| 152 (19.3) | 68 (19.6) | 73 (20.6) | 54 (35.7) | <0.0001 a | 0.001 d | 0.99 (0.74–1.32) | 0.931 |
|
| 64 (8.1) | 27 (7.7) | 20 (5.6) | 36 (23.8) | <0.0001 a | 0.001 d | 1.01 (0.67–1.53) | 0.946 |
|
| 62 (7.8) | 31 (8.9) | 37 (10.4) | 30 (19.8) | <0.0001 a | <0.001 d | 1.43 (0.99–2.08) | 0.059 |
|
| 35 (4.4) | 11 (3.1) | 7 (1.9) | 10 (6.6) | 0.053 a | 0.718 d | - | - |
|
| 55 (6.9) | 18 (5.1) | 21 (5.9) | 18 (12) | 0.044 a | 0.292 d | 0.89 (0.56–1.43) | 0.632 |
|
| 29 (3,8) | 7 (2) | 12 (3,4) | 32 (21,2) | <0.0001 a | <0.001 d | 2.20 (1.30–3.73) | 0.003 |
|
| 13 (9–19) | 15 (10–21) | 18 (12–25) | 10 (5–15) | <0.001 b | 0.437 e | 1.01 (0.99–1.02) | 0.179 |
|
| 32 (21–57) | 29 (20–48) | 37 (22–64) | 24 (14.5–39) | <0.001 b | 0.314 e | - | - |
|
| 29 (20–46) | 30 (21–41) | 36 (25–50) | 35 (24–54.5) | <0.0001 b | <0.001 e | 1.002 (1.0001–1.004) | 0.040 |
|
| 0.57 (0.4–0.8) | 0.6 (0.44–0.83) | 0.62 (0.46–0.89) | 0.5 (0.4–0.9) | 0.0172 b | 0.004 e | 1.09 (1.002–1.19) | 0.045 |
* or death in patients who died during hospitalization; ** analysis performed on 1548 patients; *** analysis performed on 1445 patients; £ analysis performed on 1403 patients; a: Chi-Square test; b: Kruskal–Wallis Test; c: one-way ANOVA; d: linear by linear association; e: linear regression.
Figure 2Prevalence of different cut-off of AST (below “upper limit of normal”) considering different clinical outcome.
Demographic, clinical, and laboratory parameters in patients discharged from hospital and those who died during hospitalization (analysis performed on 1403 patients).
| Patients Discharged from Hospital | Patients Who Died during Hospitalization | Multivariate Analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (CI 95%) | |||||
|
| 921 (71,5) | 80(69.6) | 0.034 a | Not significant | 0.666 |
|
| 60.70 (15.519) | 79.03 (12.030) | <0.001 b | 1.115 (1.088–1.1142) | <0.001 |
|
| 2 (1–4) | 5 (4–7) | <0.001 b | 1.303 (1.192–1.424) | <0.001 |
|
| 694 (53) | 86 (74.8) | 0.015 a | Not significant | 0.650 |
|
| 388 (30.1) | 79 (68.7) | <0.0001 a | Not significant | 0.110 |
|
| 293 (22.7) | 54 (47) | <0.0001 a | 1.705 (1.037–2.801) | 0.035 |
|
| 111 (8.6) | 36 (31.3) | <0.0001 a | Not significant | 0.61 |
|
| 130 (10) | 30 (26) | <0.0001 a | Not significant | 0.479 |
|
| 53 (4.1) | 10 (8.6) | 0.062 a | - | - |
|
| 94 (7.3) | 18 (15.6) | 0.009 a | Not significant | 0.105 |
|
| 48 (3.7) | 32 (27.8) | <0.0001 a | 4.332 (2.198–8.538) | <0.0001 |
|
| 15(10–21) | 10 (5–15) | <0.001 b | 0.933 (0.908–0.959) | <0.001 |
|
| 32 (21–55.5) | 24 (14.5–39) | 0.055 b | - | - |
|
| 31 (21–46) | 35 (24–54.5) | 0.003 b | Not significant | 0.063 |
|
| 0.6 (0.42–0.82) | 0.5 (0.4–0.9) | <0.0001 b | 1.1165 (1.017–1.335) | 0.027 |
* or death in patients who died during hospitalization, a: Chi-Square test; b: two-sample t-test.